Rhythmic devices
- Syncopation is when notes are held over beats, not only offbeats.
- Cross rhythm is the effect produced when two conflicting rhythms are heard together.
- Polyrhythm is when two or more rhythms with different pulses are heard together, eg where one is playing in triple time and another is playing in quadruple time - three against four.
- Triplets are three notes played in the time of two.
Hemiola
A hemiolaWhen music moves briefly from triple time to duple time without changing the time signature. The effect is one of speeding up, despite the tempo being the same. is a rhythmic device that gives the impression of the music speeding up. Music which was originally in triple time moves into duple time. This gives the effect of triple metre moving to duple metre. The chord changes move from once every three beats to once every two beats.
Hemiolas are often found near the ends of cadences. A good example of this is bars 9-10 in Handel鈥檚 鈥淎nd the Glory of the Lord鈥 from Messiah. You can hear a hemiola at 0:03-0:04 seconds in this extract:
Diminution and augmentation
Diminution and augmentation are rhythmic devices that are often used in 20th century music, especially in minimalist and serialist music.
diminutionRepeating a phrase by halving the original note values. is when a musical idea is repeated with the note values halved - so the notes are shorter. augmentationWhen a musical idea is repeated but with the note values doubled, which makes it twice as long. is when a musical idea is repeated but with the note values doubled, which doubles the length of the idea.
Offbeats
Offbeats are the weaker beats of the bar. In 4/4 time, these are beats 2 and 4. The combination of on and offbeats can often form an 鈥榰m-cha鈥 accompaniment, which is used in a variety of periods and styles. Offbeats are often used in reggae music:
Upbeat/anacrusis
An upbeat is when a musical phrase starts just before the bar line. This is also known as an anacrusisAn upbeat.. You can hear this in the opening of Mozart鈥檚 Symphony No. 40.
Rubato
Rubato is when the performer is given the freedom to relax the tempo and hold it back. This can be heard in Chopin鈥檚 Raindrop Prelude, towards the end of this extract:
Question
What is an anacrusis?
An upbeat